Jennifer Hudson was born on September 12, 1981, in Chicago, Illinois — a city that knows a thing or two about producing powerhouse voices. Jennifer’s singing career didn’t just start strong; it came with enough vocal firepower to knock over a row of church pews. She first caught the public’s attention on Season 3 of American Idol, where she didn’t win the competition but somehow managed to launch a career bigger than most of the winners (no shade, just facts).

Her breakthrough came in 2006 with Dreamgirls, where she played Effie White and delivered a performance so jaw-dropping that audiences were still picking their jaws up off the theater floor during the credits. Her rendition of “And I Am Telling You I’m Not Going” became an instant classic, earning her an Academy Award, a Golden Globe, a BAFTA, and a new title: bona fide superstar. Jennifer didn’t just act the role — she sang it into the stratosphere.

She’s gone on to release several successful albums, earning Grammys and reminding the world that her vocal cords are basically a national treasure. On stage, on screen, and in the recording studio, Jennifer’s career has been a masterclass in resilience and reinvention. She even stepped into the towering shoes of Aretha Franklin in the 2021 biopic Respect — and somehow managed to make it her own, giving us a performance that was equal parts tribute and tour de force.

Not content to just sing and act, Jennifer has also become a television star, joining the panel of coaches on The Voice in both the U.S. and the U.K., and launching The Jennifer Hudson Show in 2022, where she brings her trademark warmth, humor, and those vocal runs to daytime TV.

Jennifer Hudson’s journey from Chicago choir girl to EGOT-winning global superstar is a story of grit, talent, and a voice so powerful it probably has its own gravitational pull. On her birthday, we celebrate the woman who reminds us that even if you get voted off the island (or Idol), you can still conquer the world — one high note at a time.